Movie Madness Erik Childress
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- TV & Film
Movie Madness is a weekly podcast hosted by Chicago film critic Erik Childress presenting movie reviews, interviews, film festival coverage, DVDs, awards, box office and much more!
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Episode 471: Once Upon a Time From The Huh?
This week certainly has the latest and the greatest in Blu-rays. Depending on who you ask of course. If you inquire with Erik Childress and Peter Sobczynski you will certainly here about one of the greatest westerns of all-time (Erik’s favorite) as well as a film that deserves to be among the very best of Sidney Lumet’s career. Michael Powell directs a creepy film about voyeurism and murder and the pair look again at the film where Brandon Lee lost his life. Shout Factory has a trio of horror oddities and there is also lament for the goofy sex comedies of the ‘80s. Clint Eastwood’s most successful film gets a 4K release and a number of Francis Ford Coppola efforts get the upgrade including one that Peter believes to be his finest work.
0:00 - Intro
1:50 - Criterion (Peeping Tom 4K)
10:54 - Arrow (Night Falls on Manhattan)
19:16 - Paramount (Once Upon a Time in the West 4K, The Crow 4K)
36:18 - Shout Factory (Killer Klowns From Outer Space, Dracula 2000, Orphan)
52:03 - MVD (Joysticks)
1:01:14 - WB (American Sniper 4K)
1:08:18 - Warner Archive (You’re a Big Boy Now, The Rain People)
1:15:47 - Lionsgate (One from the Heart 4K)
1:31:57 – New Theatrical Titles On Blu-ray
1:35:17 – New Blu-ray Announcements
1:38:36 – Outro -
Episode 470: The Guys Fall For The Idea Of Pop-Tarts
Erik Childress and Steve Prokopy stick to just four films this week including the acclaimed comedy from Joanna Arnow (The Feeling That The Time For Doing Something Has Passed) and an adaptation into Anne Hathaway scandalously falling for a Boy Band member. The scandal! (The Idea of You). Jerry Seinfeld and a giant cast of comedians tell their version of the Pop-Tarts origin (Unfrosted) while Ryan Gosling and Emily Blunt try to bring life to another ‘80s television show (The Fall Guy). But there are still a lot more movies to talk about as they discuss this year’s Chicago Critics Film Festival which they produce and program. May 3-9 at the Music Box Theatre in Chicago and the lineup is stellar.
0:00 - Intro
1:09 - The Feeling That The Time For Doing Something Has Passed
10:42 – The Idea of You
24:03 - Unfrosted
38:52 – The Fall Guy
56:20 – Chicago Critics Film Festival -
Episode 469: There’s An Ocean Between Us
This week’s physical media show has a little of everything and a lot of heartbreak. Nancy Savoca provides the latter as the “Savocaissance” continues on Blu-ray this year but there is also early James L. Brooks with Burt Reynolds missing out in a stacked year of Oscar nominees. We have an Anthony Mann western and a Roman Polanski thriller; a double-up of Mean Girls and a remake of a Peckinpah film. Plus a breakdown of Steven Soderbergh’s Ocean’s films now all available on 4K.
0:00 - Intro
1:41 – Criterion (Dogfight)
8:45 - Kino (True Love, Bluebeard, Starting Over)
22:57 - Music Box (Signature Move)
25:38 – Arrow (The Tin Star, Basket Case)
37:48 – Shout Factory (Death and the Maiden, The Getaway)
47:09 – Warner Bros. (Oceans Trilogy 4K)
56:25 - Paramount (Mean Girls 2004 4K, Mean Girls 2024)
1:05:05 – New TV & Theatrical Titles on Blu-ray
1:12:05 – New Blu-ray Announcements
1:15:05 - Outro -
Episode 468: Game. Set. Match.
Erik Childress and Steve Prokopy look at a half-dozen movies this week. If fashion design is your thing then Steve has a documentary for you (John Singer Sargent: Fashion and Swagger). He has also been telling Erik about this great big spider movie since last year. Does he share the sentiment? (Infested). Steve catches up a pandemic-era comedy from Sundance (Stress Positions) and the first film from the daughter of David Cronenberg (Humane). Erik reveals what was different about the latest kick-ass extravaganza when he saw it at Toronto (Boy Kills World) and both have a lot to say about Luca Guadagnino’s tennis film (Challengers).
0:00 - Intro
2:00 - John Singer Sargent: Fashion and Swagger
8:43 - Infested
19:17 - Stress Positions
25:39 - Boy Kills World
38:03 - Humane
48:58 - Challengers
1:09:00 - Outro -
Episode 467: Livin’ Like Lovers. Rolling Like Thunder.
This week’s physical media show features Peter Sobczynski and Erik Childress talking about a seminal propaganda film from the ‘60s that inspired a ‘70s scene in Boogie Nights plus some science-fiction from the 1980s from Imprint. The ‘80s also across an all-star cast that helped launch Julia Roberts and a Nancy Savoca film from the ‘90s due for a rediscovery. They discuss the film that inspired The Untouchables, plus Paul Schrader writes a religious comedy and then gets the 4K treatment to a project he disavowed. Then his frequent partner in crime, Martin Scorsese, also gets his Oscar-winning effort upgraded. Is it now considered underrated? Come for the discussion. Stay for Peter’s tale of presenting with William Devane at an awards show.
0:00 - Intro
2:14 – Criterion (I Am Cuba)
7:02 – Imprint (Batteries Not Included, Strange Invaders)
21:30 – Sony (Steel Magnolias 4K)
25:20 – Kino (Household Saints)
30:33 – Vinegar Syndrome (Touch)
35:38 – Shout Factory (Rolling Thunder 4K)
51:06 – Arrow (The Scarface Mob)
55:32 – Warner Bros. (The Departed 4K)
1:06:47 – New Theatrical Titles on Blu-ray
1:10:06 – New Blu-ray Announcements
1:12:37 - Outro -
Episode 466: This Is A Rebellion. We Rebel.
Eight movie reviews this week from Erik Childress and Steve Prokopy include both surprises and disappointments. Steve checks out a new crime film with Scoot McNairy and Kit Harington (Blood for Dust) and Erik goes to space briefly with the new IMAX short (Deep Sky). There are some lovely films to find including the latest and possibly last from Ken Loach (The Old Oak) and a tale of childhood set amidst the former Cabrini Green housing project in Chicago (We Grown Now). A pair of part twos are out there but who made out better, Steve (The Three Musketeers – Part 2: Milady) or Erik (Rebel Moon – Part Two: The Scargiver). Finally, Guy Ritchie releases his third film in 13 months (The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare) and the Radio Silence duo goes back to mayhem in gothic houses with the vampire tale (Abigail).
0:00 - Intro
1:46 - Blood for Dust
8:51 - Deep Sky
15:09 – The Three Musketeers - Part 2: Milady
20:23 - We Grown Now
28:40 – The Old Oak
36:02 - Rebel Moon - Part Two: The Scargiver
48:08 – The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare
58:49 - Abigail
1:12:02 - Outro